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FOR MORE INFO CONTACT: +2348160968534,+2348027452082, daramolamichael70@gmail.com YOU CAN ALSO CHECK OUR WEBSITE: www.healthmodify.com.ng |
Fertility And Over Weight (Part 2) The facts about women, weight and fertility Obesity can affect fertility by causing hormonal imbalances and problems with ovulation, particularly for obese women having their first baby. Obesity is associated with poly-cystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), a common cause of infertility. PCOS is a common hormonal condition especially in infertile women, affecting up to one in five women of reproductive age. Early diagnosis, living a healthy lifestyle and treatment can help optimise fertility. Find out more about PCOS If a mother is obese, it increases the risk of pregnancy complications and health problems for the baby. Risks associated with obesity in pregnancy include miscarriage, hypertension, pre-eclampsia , gestational diabetes, infection, blood clotting, need for induction of labour, Caesarean birth and stillbirth. Babies born to overweight or obese mothers are more likely than those born to healthy-weight mothers to become obese children and adults, and to have more health problems. |
Fertility and being overweight (PART 1) If you’re trying to get pregnant, or intend to start trying, know that being overweight, especially significantly so can affect your chances of conceiving and having a healthy baby. If you are overweight and planning to get pregnant in the next year or few years, you might commit to a healthy eating and regular exercise plan. Losing even a few kilos can make a difference. The father’s weight can also affect your chances of getting pregnant. How can I tell if I’m ‘overweight’ or ‘obese’? One common measure of whether a person is ‘overweight’ or ‘obese’ is the body mass index or BMI. You calculate your BMI by dividing your weight in kilograms by the square of your height in metres. The Better Health Channel has a BMI calculator and further information about BMI. A healthy BMI is considered to be between 18.5 and 24.9. Having a BMI between 25 and 29.9 is considered ‘overweight’ and a BMI over 30 is considered ‘obese’. How can I lose weight? With a healthy eating plan and regular exercise, you’ll be on your way to a healthy weight. View our healthy weight fact sheet for some tips on how to LiveLighter. The Dieticians Association of Australia website has some excellent information about creating your own healthy diet plan. You can also visit the Australian Government’s Healthy Weight website for more information on a ‘balanced diet’ and guidelines for how much exercise you need to do to both lose weight and maintain a healthy weight. Being underweight and fertility Being underweight can also reduce a woman’s fertility. It can cause hormone imbalances that affect ovulation and therefore a woman’s chance of getting pregnant. Compared to healthy weight women, underweight women are more than twice as likely to take more than a year to get pregnant. Having a BMI under 18.5 is considered ‘underweight’. FOR MORE INFO CONTACT: +2348160968534, +2348027452082, daramolamichael70@gmail.com YOU CAN ALSO CHECK OUR WEBSITE: www.healthmodify.com.ng |
Fertility and being overweight (PART 1) If you’re trying to get pregnant, or intend to start trying, know that being overweight, especially significantly so can affect your chances of conceiving and having a healthy baby. If you are overweight and planning to get pregnant in the next year or few years, you might commit to a healthy eating and regular exercise plan. Losing even a few kilos can make a difference. The father’s weight can also affect your chances of getting pregnant. How can I tell if I’m ‘overweight’ or ‘obese’? One common measure of whether a person is ‘overweight’ or ‘obese’ is the body mass index or BMI. You calculate your BMI by dividing your weight in kilograms by the square of your height in metres. The Better Health Channel has a BMI calculator and further information about BMI. A healthy BMI is considered to be between 18.5 and 24.9. Having a BMI between 25 and 29.9 is considered ‘overweight’ and a BMI over 30 is considered ‘obese’. How can I lose weight? With a healthy eating plan and regular exercise, you’ll be on your way to a healthy weight. View our healthy weight fact sheet for some tips on how to LiveLighter. The Dieticians Association of Australia website has some excellent information about creating your own healthy diet plan. You can also visit the Australian Government’s Healthy Weight website for more information on a ‘balanced diet’ and guidelines for how much exercise you need to do to both lose weight and maintain a healthy weight. Being underweight and fertility Being underweight can also reduce a woman’s fertility. It can cause hormone imbalances that affect ovulation and therefore a woman’s chance of getting pregnant. Compared to healthy weight women, underweight women are more than twice as likely to take more than a year to get pregnant. Having a BMI under 18.5 is considered ‘underweight’. FOR MORE INFO CONTACT: +2348160968534, +2348027452082, daramolamichael70@gmail.com YOU CAN ALSO CHECK OUR WEBSITE: www.healthmodify.com.ng |
TIP OF THE DAY: INFERTILITY AND BODY WEIGHT (WOMEN) Being underweight or overweight can delay the time it takes a woman to conceive. William Gibbons, director of the division of reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Baylor College of Medicine, says weight before getting pregnant is often an overlooked factor in fertility. Keeping a healthy weight can help with conception. In onestudy, researchers evaluated the body mass index (BMI) of 2,112 pregnant women. Women in the study who had a pre-pregnancy BMI of 25-39 were considered overweight or obese and had a twofold increase in the time it took to get pregnant. A BMI less than 19 (18.5 to 24.9 is considered normal) is even worse, the researchers found. Time to conception was increased fourfold in women with a BMI below 19. MALE INFERTILITY According to Dale McClure, president of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, the idea that changing to boxers instead of briefs will boost fertility by keeping genital temperatures down is basically an old wives' tale. Earlier studies seemed to point to boxers as the better choice, McClure says. But more recent studies haven't shown a major difference. What about exposing the testicles to other sources of heat? The American Society for Reproductive Medicine says controlling temperature doesn't play much of role in boosting fertility. Some doctors, though, recommend staying away from certain sources. For instance, sitting in a hot tub day after day should be avoided, McClure says, even if a man has no known fertility problems. In at least one study, repeated exposure to high water temperatures through hot tubs or hot baths was shown to affect men's fertility. Still, no research has clearly shown a link between exposure to other sources of heat and a man's fertility. One study did show that scrotal temperatures went up in laptop users who held the computer on their laps and warned that long-term exposures to high temperatures could harm sperm. Another study found that exposure to radiation from cell phones could adversely affect sperm that had been collected from participants. Researchers in that study speculated that keeping a cell phone in a pants pocket could affect the health of a man's sperm. While neither study was sufficient to prove that exposure to sources of heat could harm sperm enough to affect fertility, McClure still says a man who wants to be a father probably shouldn't keep his laptop on his lap for extended periods of time. But even considering the above findings, McClure says he is "more concerned about hot tubbing." FOR MORE INFO AND SUPPLEMENT ORDERS, CONTACT: +2348160968534, +2348027452082, daramolamichael70@gmail.com |
FOR MORE INFO, CONTACT: +2348160968534, +2348027452082, daramolamichael70@gmail.com |
What is Infertility: Infertility refers to an inability to conceive after having unprotected sex. Infertility can also refer to the biological inability of an individual to contribute to conception, or to a female who cannot carry a pregnancy full term. It is important to check with a doctor or qualified specialist for problems like infertility. Many women benefit from working with a naturopathic doctor or specialist to address nutrition, supplements and lifestyle changes that can help. Just like other diseases, infertility is a sign that there is something wrong in the body that must be fixed. Studies show that over half of all cases of infertility are as a result of female conditions. In medicine, a risk factor is something that raises the risk of developing a condition, disease or symptom. For example, obese people are more likely to develop diabetes type 2 compared to people of normal weight; therefore, obesity is a risk factor for diabetes type 2. A woman's fertility starts to drop after she is about 32 years old, and continues doing so. I have seen how a lot of women have struggled to conceive and how painful and embarrassed they felt because they could not have a child of their own. Fortunately for some of these women, they were able to conceive by focusing on aiding the body with the right supplements, diet and lifestyle. There is a natural solution to the infertility problem that you are going through as a man or a woman Check out this touching testimonial of this woman that used these supplement December 22, 2013 at 12:20am “I was stressed and quite upset for trying for a baby for over a year, with no luck. I tried all sorts of vitamins and minerals to help my fertility, again with no luck. My husband was also feeling the tension and we just wanted an easy route, regular trips to the doctors with no luck again and again. I came across these supplements, and was also assured by Mike and was also given the full support I needed. I started taking the tablets soon as I received them, maintained a healthy diet and exercise. In between however I started my periods and was distraught thinking this was my last hope and now I’m on my periods (bugger) anyway I contacted the Mike again, who explained to me that it actually is helping my ovulate and therefore periods coming will be normal and in fact a good sign! I was so confused and just wanted quick results! However, with the advice I continued taking them, and even gave two to my husband He isn’t a tablet person so I had to convince him this was for our own good!Now few more day’s down the line, I notice a huge difference to my hair, becoming thick shiny and so healthy! With being stressed my hair was thinning and didn’t look so healthy and taking these supplements also grew my hair back!! I know this is getting long, but I want you guys to read it in detail! I then told Mike and ordered some more tablets for my aunt who suffers with hair thinning and, cross fingers it works for her too. My life has changed and now I am pregnant!! Yes people, I am pregnant and I can’t thank God enough! ![]() I thank him for been so supportive he didn’t just sell me the product and leave me to it, but came back to me every now and then and asked how I was getting on! Once again thank you Mike for everything and Thank You these natural supplements for helping me change my life!
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He isn’t a tablet person so I had to convince him this was for our own good!